- Anonymous blogging
- RECAP
- Website defacement
- Website redirects
- Website mirroring
- Denial of Service (DoS) or Distributed Denial of Service attacks (DDoS)
- Virtual sit-ins
- Leaks
- Doxing
- Geo-bombing
Despite any altruistic intentions, hacktivism attacks are hacking attacks, which means they’re illegal. But they’re also difficult to prosecute because they’re mostly conducted anonymously.
Unlike traditional hacking attacks, though, hacktivism attacks rarely have true malicious intent. In some cases, you might think of them as a form of antagonism, such as the way we might see graffiti on billboards.
Still, just as this is vandalism in real life, website defacing is considered cyber vandalism. This is just one example of the types of hacktivism that exist today.
Hacktivists generally believe they’re acting altruistically for the public good. Similar to activism in our physical world, online activists seek to bring public attention to a cause that’s important to them in hopes they’ll invoke change. This often means exposing and correcting perceived injustices.
The nature of the perceived injustices might be political, social, or religious:
- Politically motivated hacktivism seeks to promote or upheave a political agenda, sometimes to the extent of anarchy.
- Socially motivated hacktivism sets out to expose social injustices, ranging from government censorship to human rights.
- Religiously motivated hacktivism acts in the name of a religious ideology and may seek to discredit or encourage the belief.